Netzach, Hebrew NtzCh, "victory," is the seventh Sephirah of the Kabbalah
Tree of Life, located on the bottom of the Pillar of Mercy.

Universal symbolism:

Name of God: YHVH TzBAVTh, Tetragrammation Tzabaoth (Lord of
Armies)Archangel: HANIAL, Haniel, (Grace of God)Angelic Host: ThRShIShIM Tarshishim (Brilliant Ones)Astrological Correspondence: NVGH, Nogah (Venus)Tarot Correspondence: The four Sevens of the packElemental Correspondence: FireMagical Image: A beautiful naked womanAdditional Symbols: The roseAdditional Title: The Gate of the MysteriesColors:
in Atziluth - amber,
in Briah - emerald,
in Yetzirah - bright yellow-green,
in Assiah - olive flecked with goldCorrespondence in the Microcosm: The emotions, as part of RuachCorrespondence in the Body: The left hipGrade of Initiation: 4=7, PhilosophusQlippoth: AaRB TzRQ A'arab
Tzereq (the Ravens of Dispersion)

Text from the Thirty-two Paths of Wisdom corresponding to this
Sephirah: "The Seventh Path is called the Occult Intelligence because
it is the refulgent splendor of all intellectual virtues, which are perceived
by the eyes of the intellect and the contemplation of faith."

Emanating from Netzach, Netsah, is divine victory, a male, all active
and positive power of the creator, which produces all manifested worlds
in giving life to all beings and things by "extension, multiplication
and force." From Netzach issues pure life composed of light and bliss,
with which it fills everything born from the illusory or cosmic "multiplication"
of the One.

This divine "victory" power does not function alone, but must
be accompanied by the opposed and complementary divine "glory,"
feminine in essence, emanating from the Sephirah Hod.
This female quality is the receptive and negative power of the creator,
which separates, forms, and transforms all the worlds produced indifferently
by Netzach. A.G.H.

Sources:

Greer, John Michael. The New Encyclopedia of the Occult.
St. Paul, MN, Llewellyn Worldwide. p. 328
Schaya, Leo, The Universal Meaning of the Kabbalah, Secaucus, NJ,
University Books. 1971. pp. 64-65